CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

New weapons used in pursuit of film pirates

Last Updated: Tuesday, August 7, 2007 | 4:06 PM ET

Metal detectors and night-vision goggles are turning up in Calgary movie theatres as the film industry attempts to crack down on pirating.

This year, Calgary has become a major source for pirated films recorded in the theatre using camcorders or cellphones, said Serge Corriveau, vice-president of the Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association, which works with major film studios to protect their copyright in Canada.

Moviegoer Sharanpal Ruprai recently went to an advance screening of the film Becoming Jane where security staff took cellphones and laptop computers from ticket-holders.

"They were really checking, and one guy seemed to have a metal detector," she said. "Halfway through the movie, I looked up and [saw] another security guard had what seemed to be night-vision goggles. He was sort of scanning the audience for cellphones or cameras, that sort of thing."

Each print of a film carries an identifying watermark so pirated films can be traced to the very movie theatre they were filmed in, said Corriveau.

The industry is turning to a combination of high-tech and low-tech procedures to combat the problem, he said: "Having people searching knapsacks and people going up and down the aisles once the movie's started to see if they can spot somebody camcording. You can see also people with night-vision goggles searching through the crowd trying to see if they can find something."

Corriveau said that during special pre-screenings, metal detectors will also be used.

New legislation meant to catch pirates

New legislation meant to crack down on film piracy was introduced by the federal government in June, two days after former action star and California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger met with Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Currently, under the Copyright Act, a person who commercially distributes a movie they filmed in a theatre can be prosecuted, but Justice Minister and Attorney General Robert Douglas Nicholson said in June there is a gap in the law.

"Sometimes, many times, the individual who is actually doing the camcording is not in the business of commercial redistribution. Afterwards, that individual may be just paid for that particular activity," he said.

A report by a U.S. group trying to combat piracy estimates movie copying costs Hollywood more than $6 billion US a year.

Canada is on a "priority watch list" for countries with high rates of piracy. In May, Warner Brothers announced it would cancel preview screenings in Canada of its summer blockbusters until Canadian law is changed to prohibit taping in theatres.

  • This story is now closed to commenting.
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

Consumer Headlines

Quebecer's Facebook photo fight a cautionary tale
A technology expert says recent incidents involving Facebook postings should serve as a reminder that nothing is truly private on the internet.
Manitoba firm fined for misleading contests
A Manitoba firm that sold vacation time-shares has been fined $170,000 by the Competition Bureau for running misleading promotional contests.
Retail sales up 1% in September
Retail sales rose one per cent to $34.9 billion in September, the seventh increase in nine months.
Home daycares use TV as babysitter: U.S. study
Parents with kids in home-based daycare likely underestimate the time their youngsters spend watching TV there, a U.S. study says.
Dairy farmers pan report boosting free market
Dairy farmers are being thwarted from competing and innovating globally because of a supply-management system that relies on import tariffs of up to 300 per cent, says a report Monday by the Conference Board of Canada.

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Detainee transfers halted 3 times in 2009, feds say
Canada halted the transfer of detainees to Afghan prisons three times in 2009 over concerns of treatment of prisoners and access to facilities, officials in Ottawa said Monday.
Charges dropped against 4 in Creba killing Video
Manslaughter charges have been dismissed against four of those accused in the Boxing Day 2005 shooting death of 15-year-old Jane Creba in downtown Toronto.
Accused WCB gunman to get psychiatric assessment
The man accused of taking nine people hostage at the Workers' Compensation Board building in Edmonton last month has been sent to Alberta Hospital for a psychiatric assessment.
Mother lost control in child's airport fall: police Video
A 15-month-old boy died Sunday night after wriggling out of his mother's arms and falling about 15 metres at Toronto's Pearson International Airport.
Sliding U.S. dollar pushes TSX higher
The U.S. dollar continued its slide Monday and gold touched another record high.